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Population structure of Venturia inaequalis, a causal agent of apple scab, in response to heterogeneous apple tree cultivation.

Author
Abstract
:

Tracking newly emergent virulent populations in agroecosystems provides an opportunity to increase our understanding of the co-evolution dynamics of pathogens and their hosts. On the one hand host plants exert selective pressure on pathogen populations, thus dividing them into subpopulations of different virulence, while on the other hand they create an opportunity for secondary contact between the two divergent populations on one tree. The main objectives of the study were to explore whether the previously reported structure between two Venturia inaequalis population types, virulent or avirulent towards Malus x domestica cultivars carrying Rvi6 gene, is maintained or broken several years after the first emergence of new virulent strains in Poland, and to investigate the relationship between 'new' and 'native' populations derived from the same commercial orchards. For this purpose, we investigated the genetic structure of populations of the apple scab fungus, occurring on apple tree cultivars containing Rvi6, Rvi1 or Rvi17 resistance gene or no resistance at all, based on microsatellite data obtained from 606 strains sampled in 10 orchards composed of various host cultivars.

Year of Publication
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2018
Journal
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BMC evolutionary biology
Volume
:
18
Issue
:
1
Number of Pages
:
5
Date Published
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2018
URL
:
https://bmcevolbiol.biomedcentral.com/articles/10.1186/s12862-018-1122-4
DOI
:
10.1186/s12862-018-1122-4
Short Title
:
BMC Evol Biol
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